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digicube Member
Joined: 22 Jun 2002
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I'm looking to transfer several analog sources (VHS, VHS-C, Hi8, etc) to DVD, I would like to record directly from VHS to DVD without going through HDD to save time, and I would like to have VBR technology for optimal video quality and auto chaptering on the DVD for easy navigation. it also need to have S-video, Composite and DV inputs. It does not need to have a VHS deck integrated into it. Which brand and model do you recommend?
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jlietz Member
Joined: 18 Jun 2003 Location: Illinois, USA
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samijubal Member
Joined: 25 Jul 2004
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Toshiba D-R4, you can pick up one on ebay for less than $100 new, around $40-60 used. Chapters can be set at 5, 10, 15, 20 minutes.
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davideck Preservationist
Joined: 03 Feb 2003 Location: USA
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| digicube wrote: |
| I'm looking to transfer several analog sources (VHS, VHS-C, Hi8, etc) to DVD, I would like to record directly from VHS to DVD without going through HDD to save time |
FWIW, I have found that;
In the long run, the added convenience, flexibility, and capabilities of a HDD unit will save time, frustration, and blank media. As examples;
Capturing to the HDD with Timeslip capability will allow you to verify the capture quality while you're capturing instead of after the entire DVD is burned. Will you ever see something strange in the tape playback during capture and wonder what the capture looks like? With Timeslip, you can search through the capture in progress and replay a section as many times as you like.
Will you ever want to start the capture at a specific point? Timeslip will allow you to verify this in seconds and start over as many times as you like without wasting time and media.
Will you ever want to edit?
Will you ever wish that you could move/add/delete chapter points?
Will you ever want to make multiple DVD versions from the same capture(s)?
Will you ever want backups or multiple copies?
The list goes on and on.
As you gain experience and refine your DVD capturing/editing/authoring process, the value of the HDD will become more and more apparent. If you value your time, the quality of your product, and the quality of the experience, then the HDD will easily pay for itself IMO.
For analog tape captures, I recommend a Toshiba DVD Recorder because of its exceptional TBC performance and overall Picture Quality.
http://forum.videohelp.com/viewtopic.php?p=1482771#1482771
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MrSpeed Member
Joined: 29 Apr 2004 Location: United States
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You may also want to take a quick look at the Polaroid DRM-2001G. About $218 at Walmart.
The YesDVD software looks very interesting and the unit has an LSI chip. I plan on buying one as soon as my Walmart gets them in.
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digicube Member
Joined: 22 Jun 2002
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| davideck wrote: |
Will you ever want to edit?
Will you ever wish that you could move/add/delete chapter points?
Will you ever want to make multiple DVD versions from the same capture(s)?
Will you ever want backups or multiple copies?
The list goes on and on.
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The above features would be great but I was thinking that if I want to edit the video, I can do it on a PC. Couldn't I?
I think I'm buying the Toshiba D-R5.
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samijubal Member
Joined: 25 Jul 2004
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You can edit on a PC if you have a program to do it with.
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trhouse Member
Joined: 28 Aug 2003
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I do not believe the DR-5 has the DV input you mentioned in your original post. The least expensive Toshiba with it seems to be the D-KR2.
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digicube Member
Joined: 22 Jun 2002
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Thanks I'll get the D-KR2 then. Any difference in performance between TBC and digital TBC?
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davideck Preservationist
Joined: 03 Feb 2003 Location: USA
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| digicube wrote: |
| The above features would be great but I was thinking that if I want to edit the video, I can do it on a PC. Couldn't I? |
Yes, of course, but note that this will involve transferring the captured file(s) to a hard drive.
| digicube wrote: |
| Any difference in performance between TBC and digital TBC? |
I suspect not.
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samijubal Member
Joined: 25 Jul 2004
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